One suspects that we will see a flurry of such campaign commercials in
districts across the country in races up and down ballots during the
2016 general election if Trump is to triumph in the GOP primary.

As President Barack Obama did with Mitt Romney [in 2012], Hillary Clinton and a
media that has to this point enabled Donald Trump’s rise with $2
billion in free messaging will seek to define Trump so damningly that
Clinton will look comparatively angelic — which is saying something —
ensuring his fall.

The Donald will be cast as a bigoted, misogynistic, unscrupulous
oligarch with no principles except a lust for power. When Trump comes
out swinging directly at Hillary, she will become just another one of
Trump’s victims.

To his discredit, the New York businessman has provided the Democrats
and the media (but I repeat myself) with a target-rich environment for
making this case over his decades in the public eye. And best of all for
Democrats, their attacks will not only be powerful, but have the
benefit in some instances of being true.

… The ads write themselves.

And as with Sen. John McCain in 2008, a media that to this point has
served effectively as a friend, thanks to its hours of free airtime,
will instantly become a foe. Recall that Sen. McCain was labeled a
“maverick” by mainstream media outlets, and embraced by Democrats for
his willingness to take Leftist positions against his party.

The day he
won the Republican presidential nomination, the formerly fawning press turned their guns on him unmercifully.

While the media has certainly proven more hostile to Trump than
McCain during this election cycle, mainly in response to his rhetoric
and lack of decorum (note: less so his “heterodox” ideology), its
efforts to date have had the effect of providing Trump with a reliable
enemy to rail against which resonates with his supporters, all while
constantly keeping him in the news cycle.

The media in fact has had good reason not to seek to destroy Trump
outright to date.

Second, by enabling Trump’s rise, the media has
created a candidate that they believe is incredibly weak given his
unfavorable ratings and the aforementioned devastating charges that can
be leveled against him. While the media may have underestimated Trump’s
political acumen, and the mood of the American electorate to date,
nevertheless they know that a concerted effort can be used to break him
down just as they built him up. If Mitt Romney, a decent man and
moderate Republican with a stellar business record, could have his image
utterly sullied, imagine what the media can do with The Donald.

Third,
especially as more Establishment Republicans signal their approval, even
if tacit, of Trump, he will be used as the representative of the party
generally and conservatism in particular. The goal? To toxify those with
an “R” next to their name in a bid to take back Congress. Trump may
very well have the blood on his hands of real conservatives, few though
they may be in Washington.